Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP4163
Authors: Alexander P. Ljungqvist
Abstract: We study the role of underwriter compensation in mitigating conflicts of interest between companies going public and their investment bankers. Making the bank?s compensation more sensitive to the issuer?s valuation should reduce agency conflicts and thus underpricing (Baron (1982); Biais, Bossaerts, and Rochet (2002)). Consistent with this prediction, we show that contracting on higher commissions in a large sample of UK IPOs completed between 1991-2002 leads to significantly lower initial returns, after controlling for other influences on underpricing and a variety of endogeneity concerns. These results indicate that issuing firms? contractual choices affect the pricing behaviour of their IPO underwriters. Moreover, we cannot reliably reject the hypothesis that the intensity of incentives is optimal, and so that contracts are efficient.
Keywords: initial public offerings; integrated securities houses; intermediation; underpricing; underwriting contracts
JEL Codes: G24; G32
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
Increasing the commission rate (J33) | Reduction in initial returns (G12) |
Higher commissions incentivize underwriters to work harder (G24) | Higher offer prices (D44) |
Higher offer prices (D44) | Lower underpricing (D49) |
Specialized corporate finance advisors (G39) | Lower underpricing (D49) |